When Customers Go Quiet on you

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When Customers Go Quiet on you

Do you ever submit a quote and your customer goes all quiet?

I’m sure you do and I’m sure that happens to you quite a lot – it happens to most of us; it happens to me. It’s frustrating and it kind of leaves you hanging and to me it leaves you feeling a bit disrespected. I think it feels rude and frustrating.

I’m Jon. I’m from Small Fish Business Coaching. I run a program called the Tradies Toolbox Coaching Program. It’s for trades business owners who want to grow and scale and part of that is fixing up problems like this. Stopping this s%#t from happening. Fixing up your sales process and your sales activity, so this happens to you somewhat less.

I’m sorry to tell you, you never really completely eliminate this but you can reduce it quite significantly so that you waste less time and so that you have a better win rate on your quotes.

Now what you need to do to reduce the incidence of this happening is earlier in your sales process.

Now once you’ve submitted the quote, and they’ve gone quiet it’s too late, you need to do something earlier in the piece to reduce the incidence of this, right?

Before I tell you what they are, (you know they’re written there) 2 things are going on:

You’re doing quotes for people who were never going to buy or who aren’t going to buy in the near term (and I’ll come back to this in a minute)

And the other thing is, if people aren’t going to buy or they aren’t quite ready yet, well they can’t quite decide or they haven’t got any kind of specific urgency to a decision. They don’t kind of ring you up and politely say, “this is the situation.” They just go quiet.

It’s a bit confronting and a bit embarrassing to have to ring you up and tell you they don’t want to do it or they don’t want to do it yet. So they just tend not to, right? That’s a natural human thing to do which is the going quiet part, which is the bit that pisses you off.

So unless they want you to do something for them, like do the job or refine your quote, they’re unlikely to be picking up the phone to make you feel better.

We’re stuck with those two things:

You’re doing quotes for people who are thinking they’ll buy but if there is any doubt, they’ll not call.

Or they’ll make a decision and not call you up. If it’s not “please do something new for me.”

And the other thing is a pre-contract and that’s where you ask them to promise to give you a decision within a certain amount of time: a day, a week, 30 days. 30 days is probably the most that I would give people to make a decision. You might ask them to make decision in about 30 days. Quotes, go out of date, right? We might update materials, prices change, all the quotes should be valid for 30 days and no more. Let me explain both.

The idea is that you don’t do the time-consuming quote for people who aren’t likely to buy within say that 30 days, it’s a waste of time. In order to buy, people need these four things. You should only do a quote if they have these four things:

If they have the money to do the job.

Let’s face it if they don’t have the money to do the job they’re not gonna buy, you shouldn’t do a quote.

If they don’t have the authority to make a decision on their own.

And what I really mean by that is, if someone else is going to be involved in the decision with them, you need to be doing your sales pitch to them first before you scurry off and spend 5 or 10 or 20 or 30 hours preparing a detailed quote.

They need to be able to do it more or less immediately.

You know if they’re only thinking about doing it in 6 months time, a detailed quotes not the answer right? Maybe a ballpark is the answer.

And they need to have the need.

They need to have a need for the kind of trade that you are They need to have a need for all those things that go around the price that you put forward.

All the context for the price, the fact that you’re punctual or on time or you’ll do quality job or rather than a quick job. The kind of trade you are. They need to have the need for that if they don’t have the need for that, a quote is a waste of time.There’s not really time here for me to go into this in detail. If you really want to know:

How to ask the questions to get the answers to these questions.

How to ask that without the awkward questions.

Because they’re quite confronting right? Asking these questions.

I’m here to tell you, you can do that.

You can ask these questions without offending people and and while being professional and grownup. And I can teach you how to work it out. I’m not going to do it now. Maybe I’ll make it the topic of another video.

The second thing…. oh really, if you really want to know, get in touch with me. Make contact through the website or Facebook and I’ll spend a bit of time with you one-to-one, and help you put together a little questionnaire for how to do that. That’s what I do with my coaching clients.

The second thing is the pre-contract.

Asking people to commit to give you a decision within a certain time frame and that addresses a couple of things.

That addresses their readiness to kind of defer a decision if they don’t have any urgency because it puts a stop. “I said I would tell him by Tuesday so I will.” People like to do what they said they were going to do. It’s a known factor in influencing our behavior. So if I say I’m going to do something, pretty much I want to do it.

Alright so if you say someone, “can you give me a decision by the end of the week?” If they say yes, chances are they’ll try quite hard to do so. So which is good for you right? Then they’re gonna give you a decision whether it’s a yes or no at least it’s a decision. If you can’t get them to make a commitment to making a decision, I don’t think you should be writing a detailed quote And again, maybe a ballpark is enough for them right. If they’re not ready to buy, a proper quote is not required and a ballpark or some other discussion of how much it’s going to cost is probably what they need.

Remember this:

The reason we asked for a quote is because it’s kind of all we know how to ask for.

If they’re kicking tyres and they just kind of want to know how much it’s going to cost. They still ask for a quote. If they really go we need to decide which trades company to go with, they start, “I’ll ask for a quote.”

So whatever they’re trying to figure out, they usually just go, “can you give me a quote please?” And if you just rush off with your tape measure and spend hours, and hours preparing one, you’re kind of missing the point. You’re missing the opportunity to do your actual selling and you’re leaving yourself open to wasting all that time doing quotes you don’t win.

So do me a favor, comment below or in the Facebook, if you’re watching this on Facebook, about your experience of this, about doing quotes when people got quiet and how frustrating it is.

Click here to book a10-minute chat with Jon.

We have been working with Jon for 6 months now. He has helped record the best period of growth for a very long time. Our confidence as a business and in our business has grown as well. We are well in our way to achieving become of our goals ahead of time. The education of my staff has helped them become more efficient and in more confident in their roles, especially the back office operations. They tell me what to do now instead of the other way round. I did something recently that I've not done before, I went on a break and handed over one of the jobs to my lead tradie. I couldn't have done that before. Thanks to small fish and their philosophy.

Jon and i have worked together for the last year, if it wasn't for him my business wouldn't be still trading.
He has helped in so many ways, not just mentoring, finance and generally growing up in the business, about how my business and business in general works.
His contacts and sometimes tough love is what all we need to succeed. His compassion and real commitment to your busiest is a wonderful assets to have.

Fileman have been dealing with Small Fish over the past twelve months to build email marketing campaigns for lead generation. Small Fish have been a great resource for crafting our content, coordinating the logistics of each send and managing our databases so that we can focus on generating sales. We found Small Fish easy to deal with and Jon was always able to provide the right advice for our campaigns. I would recommend Small Fish to people who need expertise in any aspects of email marketing.

Absolutely brilliant! Good business coaching is essential for all business owners, and Jon is a vibrant, professional and extremely effective coach. I have used Jon Dale myself personally for business coaching, and he has also coached many of my accounting clients with great success. Highly recommend Jon Dale and Small Fish Business Coaching.